
Used to be when it first came out, Wired was a mag the best quality printing on no substance I had ever seen, really seemed like a borderline artist mag. The colors were amazing. I see now, upon looking at a recent issue, their content seems to have improved dramatically. Brian ----- Original Message ----- From: "Pete Kruckenberg" <pete@kruckenberg.com> To: <nanog@merit.edu> Sent: Thursday, November 14, 2002 9:22 AM Subject: Re: PAIX
Wired covered several of these topics in their August issue.
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/10.08/korea.html
The article points out several subtle, yet fundamental, changes that happen socially and psychologically once the broadband network is available everywhere, to virtually everyone, all the time. We have yet to experience this in the US. I suspect that when it happens, it will be much different than we expect it to be, technically and otherwise.
We still have to remember that for all the hype about the Internet, the killer app is still email and instant messenging. The "killer apps" on Internet2 (video conferencing, digital libraries, media-rich collaboration), which give some indication of what the future killer app will be, seem to be equally mundane (but exciting at the same time).
Pete.
On Thu, 14 Nov 2002 fkittred@gwi.net wrote:
On Thu, 14 Nov 2002 10:22:09 -0500 David Diaz wrote:
2) There is a lack of a killer app requiring peering every 100 sq Km.
I recommend some quality time with journals covering South Korea, broadband, online gaming and video rental.